“With Police Cases I Don’t Ever Guess What a Jury Will Do…”

“This case was like an Innocence Project meets multiple murder meets a public corruption case,” Bobbi Bernstein, the deputy chief of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, who led the prosecution team at the Danziger Bridge trial told NPR in an interview today. “Any one of those charges would be enormous on its own. But it was all three melded together. I’ve been doing this a long time and I thought I’d seen every kind of police misconduct, but I’ve never seen a case like this.”

On Aug. 5, five New Orleans police officers were convicted of the post-Katrina shootings — which killed two unarmed civilians and gravely wounded four others — and of conspiring to cover up the incident. An additional five officers have pleaded guilty in the case.

Bernstein also told NPR she believes the crime “could only have happened because of Katrina. These officers had the mentality that they needed to take care of things themselves. The shooting wasn’t a mistake … the terrible mistake is that these officers adopted an us-versus-them attitude. Anybody on the bridge was a bad guy, undeserving of their concern and constitutional protection.”

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